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In prehistoric times, dinosaurs were so massive that archeologists wonder how they were not crushed under their own weight.

Could the Earth rotate fast enough to make everything considerably lighter and retain an atmosphere?

Could the slowing of the rotation cause extinction among the larger animals in the future if an asteroid hit the Earth at such angle as to slow its rotation?

Update: This question did not do well here and I have written it here. Both answers were up voted by me. https://earthscience.stackexchange.com/questions/13432/what-is-the-fastest-the-earth-has-ever-spun

Muze
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    This seems like a question for the World Building SE – Areeb Sep 04 '16 at 02:40
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    For your first sentence, a citation is seriously needed. I can only find rather...dubitable sources claiming this. – ACuriousMind Sep 04 '16 at 13:52
  • @ACuriousMind This question deals with something similar as the first sentence. – Bass Sep 05 '16 at 19:47
  • @Bass Yes, it does, but it flat-out contradicts the sentence, saying why it wasn't a problem. Not that that surprises me. – ACuriousMind Sep 06 '16 at 10:40
  • @ACuriousMind Not following you. The question asked "how could heavy dinosaurs cope with their weight?", how does that contradict the sentence? – Bass Sep 06 '16 at 11:22
  • @Bass This question claims that "archeologists wonder how they were not crushed under their own weight". The question you linked shows that at least biologists seem to know perfectly well that their weight wouldn't have crushed them. – ACuriousMind Sep 06 '16 at 11:40
  • @ACuriousMind Yes, I have seen the answer. But saying that the linked question "flat-out contradicts" the sentence is just wrong. A question is not a logical statement, it can't contradict anything, as I'm sure you're well aware. By linking the question (not the answer) I wanted to say OP is not the only one who ever wondered how dinosaurs could get so big. – Bass Sep 06 '16 at 12:56
  • Please don't migrate this question to Worldbuilding. It's a pure What-If question with nothing whatsoever to do with worldbuilding; What-Ifs are generally off-topic there. – HDE 226868 Sep 06 '16 at 23:55

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I can not say how fast would support the life. Also life is very broad term.

But for your second part - "slowing down, and increased gravity and crushing of animals under their wait" makes sense theoretically but in practical, anything massive enough to alter the rotation period would cause so much collateral damage that it would destroy life anyway and much faster than change in gravity would do.

But if the rotation was slowed down by stream of smaller impacts where individual impacts did not destroy life but contributed to slowdown of rotation, then it could have been possible over a long period of time. If it happens over a short period, then flood, earthquakes etc could have destroyed bigger life.

Actually, after looking at answer from peterh, realized, the effect due to gravity would be very tiny and it may not make any difference unless the difference in rotational speeds is drastic.

kpv
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Slower spinning would result a higher temperature difference between the nights and the days. On the Moon, where there is no athmosphere and spins monthly, it is -120 $^\circ$ and +110 $^\circ$. The gravity increase is insignificant (compare to the poles - there is no gravity decrease due to centrifugal forces, despite that there is no significant difference).

Faster spin would increase the coriolis force and thus the passat winds.

Much faster spinning would decrease the escape velocity around the equators, which will result the loss of the athmosphere.

peterh
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